Popovich prods Spurs with memories










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By Jeff McDonald

For teams across the NBA, the first day of training camp is a day of rebirth, a time for new beginnings and new hope, a prelude to 82 games of untapped promise.

It is a time when every team is undefeated, and every team — except maybe for the one in Charlotte — can consider itself a contender.

Yet before coach Gregg Popovich would allow his Spurs to talk about where they hope this nascent season is headed, he first wanted them to reflect on how the last one ended.

So before players were released to fulfill media day obligations Monday, Popovich convened the season’s first team meeting, then cued up footage from last June’s collapse against Oklahoma City in the Western Conference finals.

“He wanted us to be fired up,” guard Manu Ginobili said, “knowing we were very close, and we let it go.”

For a Spurs team that had won 20 games in a row before losing its final four last season, the film session made for painful viewing.

For All-Star point guard Tony Parker, who came perilously close to suffering a career-altering injury to his left eye not long after the playoff ouster, it was a relief to be able to watch anything at all.

After three hours of exams, Parker has been medically cleared for full participation when training camp opens this morning. He will not require the protective goggles doctors prescribed for his stint at the London Olympics in August.

Parker suffered a scratched cornea in a June 15 bar fight in New York between hip-hop stars Drake and Chris Brown and their entourages.

According to reports, Parker was an innocent bystander in the melee. Still, he said the incident helped him “put life in perspective.”

“You just think of stuff different,” Parker said. “In life, stuff happens, and you just learn from it, and you try to be more careful.”

Popovich says he naturally frets about the health of his players when they break for the summer, especially those who participate in international competition.

“Tony’s situation was scarier,” Popovich admitted.

The Spurs return 13 players from last year’s team that tied for the NBA’s best record at 50-16 and came within two wins of returning to the Finals for the first time since 2007.

Few are as important as Parker, who was the team’s leading scorer and assist man in what was an All-NBA campaign.

Parker’s positive medical evaluation has allowed Popovich to breathe easier — and has allowed Parker’s teammates to declare open season on the 30-year-old point guard.

Leading the needling has been puckish captain Tim Duncan, who has gigged Parker about everything from his “chic” choice of eyewear to the June incident’s effect on the Spurs’ goody-goody reputation.

“We’re trying to get street cred,” said Duncan, who in July signed a new three-year, $30 million deal to resume his role as team provocateur. “That’s what this team’s all about.”

Once Parker is done dodging the slings and arrows coming from the Spurs’ Hall of Fame-bound power forward, the mission will be for him to repeat what Popovich often has called his best professional season.

“That’s what he’s getting paid to do,” Popovich said. “He’s got to be committed and disciplined enough to repeat what he did last year. He knows what we expect out of him.”

After finishing a career-best fifth in the league MVP voting last season, Parker believes himself up to the task.

“I think it’s a great challenge to do the same thing,” he said. “I feel like the next three or four years are going to be the best basketball of my career.”

Before Parker and the Spurs could get too far ahead of themselves, Popovich pulled them back as only he can.

The scars of what slipped away against Oklahoma City remain fresh with his players. He hopes they never fully get over it.

“I think we all still feel (disappointed), and that’s good,” Popovich said. “We’ve got to use that.”

jmcdonald?@express-news.net
Twitter: @JMcDonald_SAEN

OKC faces tough decision with Harden

Among other factors — mainly greed, greed and more greed — one of the primary motivations for last year’s lockout was to implement stricter financial punishments to narrow the gap between the NBA’s haves and have-nots.

So it comes as no small irony that one of the first victims of the league’s punitive measures could be the small-market Oklahoma City Thunder, who have assembled a ridiculous collection of elite young talent but will be hard-pressed to keep all their pieces together.

After rewarding cornerstones Kevin Durant, Russell Westbrook and Serge Ibaka to long-term contracts, there might not be enough cash left over to retain James Harden, last season’s Sixth Man of the Year and OKC’s main decision-maker down the stretch.

Without an extension by Oct. 31 he’ll be a restricted free agent next summer, which means the Thunder will have the right to match any of the substantial offers he’s likely  to receive on the open market. But as NBA.com’s David Aldridge examines in , they might not have the resources to do so. In doing so he compares their situation to that of the Spurs, who have had to routinely make difficult decisions over the years:

OKC is in the same relative position as the Spurs found themselves at the start of their dynasty. San Antonio made its choice, building a four-time champion around Tim Duncan, Tony Parker and Manu Ginobili. Only Duncan got a max deal out of those three, and San Antonio has been able to keep its core together for a decade. But the Spurs had to let Stephen Jackson go to Atlanta in free agency in 2003, and it took them nine years to get him back. They had to let Hedo Turkoglu head to Orlando as a free agent in 2004, and, painfully, trade the rights to Luis Scola to Houston to keep their financial house in order.

On that note, perhaps Harden should take a close look at Parker and Ginobili, both of whom were rewarded with multiple championships for taking less than they would have gotten elsewhere.

But it’s also fair to put some of the focus on the  the NBA has put in place to limit massive overspending.

The Thunder did everything the old-fashioned way: i.e. they actually drafted and developed their key players, instead of poaching free agents and disgruntled superstars to form one of the so-called “Super Teams” that whipped so many into a frenzy. (Think Miami and the Lakers.) And yet they might not be able to reap the full benefits of their ingenuity should Harden walk.

If so, that would seem to be a classic case of unintended consequences for a new set of rules that were supposed to help, not hurt, small-market franchises.

Spurs look to go up 2-0 on Thunder

 

“It was a hard-fought ball game. Nothing to be ashamed of.” Thunder Head Coach Scott Brooks

The San Antonio Spurs have continued their winning ways and look to capture their 20th consecutive victory tonight as they face the Oklahoma City Thunder for Game 2 of the Western Conference Finals.

In game 1, the Spurs showed the rust of a week plus off while waiting for the Thunder and were behind for 3/4 of the game until Head Coach Gregg Popovich uttered those words that will most likely flood the city of San Antonio via posters and T-shirts “I want some nasty!”

The “nasty” that Popovich was looking for erupted in the 4th quarter as the Spurs outscored the Thunder 39-27 to turn a 10-point deficit into a 10-point lead that the Spurs never relinquished.

“They found some rhythm. They were able to attack us through penetration,” said point guard Derek Fisher. “We spent a lot of time trying to talk about doing the job, taking away the penetration of Ginobili and (Tony) Parker. We didn’t do that in the fourth quarter. You can’t give up a 30-point quarter in a playoff game and expect to win.”

The Spurs and Thunder kick off Game 2 tonight at the AT&T Center at 7:30.   Get your tickets to the hottest series thus far in the NBA Playoffs.